It’s not professional to start an essay with a question but when it relates to effecting trillion of American citizens, why not ask what is going on. What’s going to happen to my healthcare, how difficult will it be to afford healthcare, will this action effect the people who needs coverage, etc.? Yes, discussing about healthcare is confusing and frustrating. Even with the news coverage, focusing more on Obamacare than any other healthcare coverage we’re used to having. Our 45th President calls it Obamacare when it’s called the “Affordable Care Act” (ACA) However; continues to tweet that many televised & article news media outlets are putting out fabricated events. So even the people who wants to repeal the Affordable Care Act are confused …show more content…
One legislation is called “The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act” and the other is “The Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act”. Together expanding the Medicaid coverage to millions of low-income Americans and improving the Children Health Insurance Program(CHIP). While looking up the difference of Healthcare and Obamacare on google, I changed my search question to why was Obamacare created. Assumed that everyone had healthcare, WRONG. While trillion of us worrying for ourselves, increasingly 15% of American citizens do not have coverage and/or cannot afford it. Targeting more for the poor and elderly; it pays for a combination of cuts in government spending and new revenue from several sources, mainly to increase taxes to High-class income …show more content…
Congress is the bicameral legislature of the federal government. It consist of two chambers the “Senate” and the “House of Representatives”. Congress was created in 1789 and ideally taken from the Congress of the Confederation. While sitting in Professor Ansapch class, he mentioned how Congress was made to divide Americans. Throughout history, this fight for a greater America and knowing what’s best for the people is normal when it’s a division to gain a greater power over the other. Even if the majority people of Congress are Republican today, a law and bill still cannot get pass from either side of Congress. Recently, the House legislation and the Senate introduced its change of the bill to repeal the Affordable Care Act. They will both produce major cuts in insurance coverage to middle class Americans and affect them by costing so much which will be unaffordable. According to the Congressional Budget Office, mainly both legislatures focus on major reductions in federal aid for poor Americans who rely on Medicaid. And for consumers who currently qualify for federal subsidies to help them buy private health insurance through the Obamacare marketplace will terminate once it’s passed. It has estimated that 23 million people would not have insurance under the House bill. The Senate fell short to just 22 million. But this bill is